Skip to main content

Categories

 


 

The Maryland History and Culture Bibliography

Coers, D. V. "New Light on the Composition of Ebenezer Cook's Sot-Weed Factor." American Literature 49 (January 1978): 604-06.
Notes: Coers offers evidence to support the contention that Ebenezer Cook's satire <em>The Sot-Weed Factor</em> was likely written no earlier than 1702, later than the 1695 date previously ascribed. He draws upon internal references in Cook's writing to Queen Anne, not crowned monarch until 1702, and a Dorchester County Court land record to support his case. The later date would suggest that the work was based on his visit to Maryland in the 1690s, but not written until afterwards.

Costello, M. Starr. "The Role of Wealth in Widowhood and Remarriage Patterns in Seventeenth Century Maryland." Chronicles of St. Mary's 28 (July 1980): 197-216.

"A Dialect Study of St. Mary's County, Maryland." Chronicles of St. Mary's 30 (November 1982): 497-504; (December 1982): 507-15.

Dyson, Roy. "St. Mary's County and Maryland's 350th Anniversary." Chronicles of St. Mary's 32 (February 1984): 125-128.

Fausz, J. Frederick. "Present at the 'Creation': The Chesapeake World that Greeted the Maryland Colonists." Maryland Historical Magazine 79 (Spring 1984): 7-20.
Notes: Fausz examines relations between Europeans (especially the English of Maryland and Virginia) and Native Americans of the Chesapeake region in the decade immediately preceding the settlement of the Maryland colony at St. Mary's in 1634. He argues that the interaction between Englishmen and Native Americans provided the basis for tobacco cultivation and the beaver fur trade. Both paved the way for successful adaption of the early English settlers to new American conditions.

Gibb, James G., and Julia A. King. "Gender, Activity Areas, and Homelots in the 17th-Century Chesapeake Region." Historical Archaeology 25 (1991): 109-131.
Notes: Using archaeological records and spatial analysis from three Southern Maryland tobacco plantation sites, the authors provide an ethnographic look at life for seventeenth-century Maryland colonists in terms of gender and class roles. The article provides a brief overview of the economics of the Chesapeake region, the structure of living arrangements, and the gendered nature of tasks. The evidence suggests how gendered and class-based activities contributed to both household production and accrued wealth. The authors conclude that comparisons between the three sites provide the basis for understanding how household wealth was a direct corollary of the ability to secure a large work force and to develop a high degree of specialization.

Guazzo, Eugene. "Hunting the Fox in Saint Mary's." Chronicles of St. Mary's 28 (May 1980): 177-86.

Guyther, J. Roy. "Moonshine in St. Mary's." Chronicles of St. Mary's 39 (Fall 1991): 49-52.

Guyther, Joseph Roy. "Riddle of the Amish Culture." Chronicles of St. Mary's 45 (Fall 1997): 242-46.

Hammett, Regina Combs. "New York City Orphans in St. Mary's County, Maryland." Chronicles of St. Mary's 38 (Winter 1990): 369-70.

Hammett, Regina Combs. "The Bootleg Industry." Chronicles of St. Mary's 39 (Fall 1991): 52-57.

Horn, James. Adapting to a New World: English Society in the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake. Chapel Hill: Published for the Institute of Early American History and Culture, Williamsburg, Virginia, by the University of North Carolina Press, 1994.
Notes: Horn examines Chesapeake society in the period 1607 to 1690 to determine the degree to which English attitudes and values persisted in the adaptation to New World conditions. He provides a comparison of the English societies from which the settlers had come (Gloucestershire and Kent as representative regions of England) to those they established in the Chesapeake region (Lower Norfolk and Lancaster Counties in Virginia serve as case studies, supplemented by considerable evidence drawn from St. Mary's County, Maryland) in terms of family, work, standard of living, social order, and religion. Horn concludes that "Maryland and Virginia society is incomprehensible without an awareness of English social development in the seventeenth century" (p. 437).

Hoxie, John W. "Foxhunting at Belvidere Farm." Chronicles of St. Mary's 28 (June 1980): 189-96.

Hurry, Silas D. "The 17th Century Tidewater, A Tentative Dietary Analysis." Chronicles of St. Mary's 26 (April 1978): 367-73.

Keeler, Robert Winston. The Homelot on the Seventeenth-Century Chesapeake Tidewater Frontier. Ph.D. diss., University of Oregon, 1978.
Notes: St. John's in St. Mary's City.

Linton, Jane R. "All Saints Parish, Oakley, Maryland." Chronicles of St. Mary's 43 (Summer 1995): 38-40.

Poole, Martha Sprigg. "Tudor Hall and Those Who Lived There." Chronicles of St. Mary's 37 (Winter 1989): 258-70.

Sharon, Michael B. "A Social Profile of the Land Owners of 1660." Chronicles of St. Mary's 29 (July 1981): 333-44; (August 1981): 347-51.

Sparks, Barry. "From Maryland's Past: The Dorchester County Baseball War." Maryland 20 (Summer 1988): 41.

Wennersten, John R. "Dorchester County's Celebrity Hunt." Maryland 20 (Autumn 1987): 16- 19.

Fenwick, Charles E. "The Whiskey Ferry: Shedding Light on a Shady Subject." Chronicles of St. Mary's 45 (Winter 1997): 263-64.

Stone, Garry W. "History of Mattapany Road (Path)." Chronicles of St. Mary's 37 (Fall 1989): 247-49.

Broad, David B. "Annie Oakley: Woman, Legend, and Myth." Journal of the West 37 (January 1998): 11-18.

Burwell, Gale, trans. "Diary of Rose Stettinius Gray." Chronicles of St. Mary's 41 (Fall 1993): 229-48.

Fresco, Margaret King Myers. "Caroline R. Martin, M.D. (1874-1958)." Chronicles of St. Mary's 38 (Spring 1990): 300-3.

Back to Top